Rocker Neil Young 鈥檚 headline Glastonbury performance has taken another twist – with festival organiser Emily Eavis now admitting his set might not be televised at all. The Mirror revealed on Tuesday how the Heart of Gold singer, 79, was still wrangling with the BBC about what they could show amid fears it could be heavily cut. It came after we told how a BBC schedule of live sets released to the public omits Young, while mentioning headliners such as Charli xcx and Doechii who play other stages on Saturday. Now Eavis has said she doubts the set will be televised at all. BBC reporter Colin Paterson said: 鈥淚 asked Emily Eavis what was going on and she says she does not believe that Neil Young鈥檚 set will be broadcast by the BBC. 鈥淭here鈥檚 been all kinds of backstage wrangling and negotiations, but as things currently stand, Neil Young鈥檚 headline set on Saturday night will not be broadcast by the BBC. Instead, they鈥檒l be showing Charlie XCX.鈥 And in another development, fans are now fearful after his last two European shows in Bergen, Norway, and Copenhagen, Denmark, were hit with sound problems. Fans complained about a poor vocal mix. Some were also unhappy that on at least one of those shows, Neil didn鈥檛 have any large screens for fans to see the action from the back of the crowd. It鈥檚 not known whether that will be the case at Glastonbury or not. BBC bosses are said to be treading carefully after the star pulled out of the festival earlier this year citing concerns about the BBC鈥檚 鈥渃orporate control鈥. He said in January: 鈥淲e were told that BBC was now a partner in Glastonbury and wanted us to do a lot of things in a way we were not interested in. It seems Glastonbury is now under corporate control and is not the way I remember it being.鈥 A BBC spokeswoman said: 鈥淲e aim to bring audiences as many performances as possible from the Pyramid Stage , and our schedules and plans continue to be finalised, right up to and during the festival.鈥 Young has voices his concerns made principled stands recently. He blocked his music from Spotify for two years, saying a podcaster on the platform had spread vaccine misinformation. When Young played Glastonbury in 2009 only five songs were televised. Speaking at the time Mark Cooper, then executive producer of the BBC鈥檚 Glastonbury coverage, said: 鈥淣eil Young鈥檚 career has been conducted on his own terms. 鈥淭hey believe in the live event and retaining its mystery and that of their artist. They have decided to make one song available online over the weekend to give a flavour of his set. That鈥檚 Rockin鈥 in the Free World and that鈥檚 their decision. You probably won鈥檛 find too many Neil Young performances available freely on TV or online.鈥